@article{oai:rekihaku.repo.nii.ac.jp:00001314, author = {三宅, 裕 and Miyake, Yutaka}, journal = {国立歴史民俗博物館研究報告, Bulletin of the National Museum of Japanese History}, month = {Mar}, note = {application/pdf, The agricultural society in West Asia based on the domestication of grains, legumes and ungulate animals is supposed to be originated in the Levant. Anatolia, especially the highland beyond the Taurus Mountains, is assumed to play an important role in the spreading of the early farming society toward the west, ultimately reaching in West Europe. In central Anatolia the earliest farming society so far was founded in the first half of the 7th millennium b.c. According to the evidence from aşıklı höyük, no domesticated animals was attested, while the wheat cultivation was already practiced. It seems likely that the agricultural society based on both plant and animal domestication was established in the beginning of the Pottery Neolithic, the 6th millennium b.c. Northwestern Turkey was inhabited by the local hunter-gatherers with microlithic industry, which is comparable to Epi-Gravettian, even in the early Holocene. The early farming villages appeared in the middle of the 6th millennium b.c. From the beginning there was the evidence of plant and animal domestication. It can be concluded that the new way of subsistence was introduced from central Anatolia.}, pages = {155--156}, title = {西アジア型農耕の西方展開(Ⅰ部 農耕社会の形成)}, volume = {119}, year = {2004}, yomi = {ミヤケ, ユタカ} }